Saturday, November 3, 2012
Viola Davis now on 'Prisoners'
Viola Davis is now one of the cast of "Prisoners," which also includes stars Jake Gyllenhaal. Davis, who was nominated for an Oscar for "The Help," also joins Paul Dano, Hugh Jackman and Melissa Leo in the thriller to be directed by Denis Villeneuve ("Incendies").
Written by Aaron Guzikowski ("Contraband"), the story revolves around a small-town carpenter named Keller (Jackman) whose young daughter and her best friend are kidnapped. After the cops fail to find them, Keller takes the law into his own hands, but in the process runs up against Detective
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Robert Pattinson Takes new Role in ‘Hold On To Me’
Robert Pattinson signs to star with Carey Mulligan in Hold On To Me, and will be directed by by James Marsh.
Based on a true story about a femme fatale who with her boyfriend kidnaps and ransoms the town’s richest man. They bury the man in a box and things go wrong.
Labels:
Carey Mulligan,
Hold On To Me,
James Marsh,
Robert Pattinson
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Frankenweenie (2012)
Victor brings back to life his pet Sparky after it got hit by a car. But the monstrous appearance of Sparky scared their neighbors. Victor needs to convince everyone that despite his appearance, Sparky's still the good loyal friend he's always been.
Saturday, September 29, 2012
New DVD Releases
The Avengers (2012)
Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 1 (2012 Video)
You Only Live Twice (1967)
American Horror Story: Asylum (2011 Mini-Series)
Resident Evil: Damnation (2012)
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (2000 TV Series)
Gossip Girl (2007 TV Series)
CSI: Miami (2002 TV Series)
Family Guy (1999 TV Series)
CSI: NY (2004 TV Series)
The Tall Man (2012)
See more here!
Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 1 (2012 Video)
You Only Live Twice (1967)
American Horror Story: Asylum (2011 Mini-Series)
Resident Evil: Damnation (2012)
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (2000 TV Series)
Gossip Girl (2007 TV Series)
CSI: Miami (2002 TV Series)
Family Guy (1999 TV Series)
CSI: NY (2004 TV Series)
The Tall Man (2012)
See more here!
Friday, September 14, 2012
Top United States DVD Rentals for the week ending 9 September 2012
Rank
|
Prev
Rank |
Title
|
Days
|
1.
|
New
|
Safe
(2012/I)
|
5
|
2.
|
1
|
The
Hunger Games (2012)
|
22
|
3.
|
91
|
The
Lorax (2012)
|
33
|
4.
|
2
|
The
Dictator (2012)
|
19
|
5.
|
3
|
Think
Like a Man (2012)
|
12
|
6.
|
4
|
The
Pirates! Band of Misfits (2012)
|
12
|
7.
|
6
|
Freelancers
(2012)
|
19
|
8.
|
79
|
The
Lucky One (2012)
|
12
|
9.
|
8
|
American
Reunion (2012)
|
61
|
10.
|
7
|
The
Three Stooges (2012)
|
54
|
11.
|
5
|
Bernie
(2011)
|
19
|
12.
|
9
|
Silent
House (2011)
|
47
|
13.
|
10
|
21 Jump
Street (2012)
|
75
|
14.
|
13
|
89
|
|
15.
|
12
|
Safe
House (2012)
|
96
|
16.
|
11
|
Mirror
Mirror (2012/I)
|
75
|
17.
|
15
|
Wanderlust
(2012)
|
82
|
18.
|
14
|
Lockout
(2012)
|
54
|
19.
|
16
|
The
Raid: Redemption (2011)
|
26
|
20.
|
18
|
Wrath of
the Titans (2012)
|
75
|
Friday, September 12, 2008
Apple Bets on Online Movie Rentals
By MAY WONG AP Technology Writer
SAN FRANCISCO January 16, 2008 (AP) The Associated Press
Apple Inc. has redoubled its effort to distribute movies online, gaining a foothold in a promising but unproven business that could eventually bolster its other core products.
Apple CEO Steve Jobs gestures as he talks about online movie rentals during his keynote at the...
Apple CEO Steve Jobs gestures as he talks about online movie rentals during his keynote at the MacWorld Conference in San Francisco, Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2008. Jobs confirmed the tech giant's foray into online movie rentals, revealing an alliance with all six major movie studios to offer first-run films over high-speed Internet connections. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma) The tech giant launched a movie rental service at its online iTunes Store Tuesday and won the alliances of all six major movie studios to supply content.
Under terms similar to those at other online movie providers, rental prices range from $2.99 for library titles, $3.99 for new releases, and $1 extra for high-definition versions. The movies are ready to watch almost instantly over a high-speed Internet connection, and users have a 24-hour period to watch each movie once they start it.
The service, which launched in the U.S. on Tuesday and will roll out internationally later this year, will work on Macs, Windows-based machines, iPhones, iPods or the Apple TV set-top box.
But Apple and its rivals all face the challenge of making Internet delivery easy and affordable enough to drive a massive change in the habits of the movie-watching public.
Many analysts give Apple high odds of surviving what will likely be a long, bloody battle to dominate the digital living room.
Even though Apple's stock suffered Tuesday, some investors appeared to agree. Shares of Blockbuster Inc. plunged nearly 17 percent after Apple CEO Steve Jobs, speaking at the Macworld Conference and Expo in San Francisco, announced the new threat to the world's largest chain of movie-rental stores.
"Movies are really a big part of people's lives, just like music. And being able to do this on Apple's platform is an intriguing alternative to running out to the video store or getting DVDs through your mail," American Technology Research analyst Shaw Wu said.
Apple investors, however, seemed underwhelmed by Tuesday's parade of product announcements, which also included an ultra-slim notebook computer called the MacBook Air and a backup storage drive dubbed Time Capsule.
Shares of Apple slipped, losing $9.74, or 5.5 percent, to close Tuesday at $169.04. They fell another 3.6 percent, to $163.01, in after-hours trading.
SAN FRANCISCO January 16, 2008 (AP) The Associated Press
Apple Inc. has redoubled its effort to distribute movies online, gaining a foothold in a promising but unproven business that could eventually bolster its other core products.
Apple CEO Steve Jobs gestures as he talks about online movie rentals during his keynote at the...
Apple CEO Steve Jobs gestures as he talks about online movie rentals during his keynote at the MacWorld Conference in San Francisco, Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2008. Jobs confirmed the tech giant's foray into online movie rentals, revealing an alliance with all six major movie studios to offer first-run films over high-speed Internet connections. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma) The tech giant launched a movie rental service at its online iTunes Store Tuesday and won the alliances of all six major movie studios to supply content.
Under terms similar to those at other online movie providers, rental prices range from $2.99 for library titles, $3.99 for new releases, and $1 extra for high-definition versions. The movies are ready to watch almost instantly over a high-speed Internet connection, and users have a 24-hour period to watch each movie once they start it.
The service, which launched in the U.S. on Tuesday and will roll out internationally later this year, will work on Macs, Windows-based machines, iPhones, iPods or the Apple TV set-top box.
But Apple and its rivals all face the challenge of making Internet delivery easy and affordable enough to drive a massive change in the habits of the movie-watching public.
Many analysts give Apple high odds of surviving what will likely be a long, bloody battle to dominate the digital living room.
Even though Apple's stock suffered Tuesday, some investors appeared to agree. Shares of Blockbuster Inc. plunged nearly 17 percent after Apple CEO Steve Jobs, speaking at the Macworld Conference and Expo in San Francisco, announced the new threat to the world's largest chain of movie-rental stores.
"Movies are really a big part of people's lives, just like music. And being able to do this on Apple's platform is an intriguing alternative to running out to the video store or getting DVDs through your mail," American Technology Research analyst Shaw Wu said.
Apple investors, however, seemed underwhelmed by Tuesday's parade of product announcements, which also included an ultra-slim notebook computer called the MacBook Air and a backup storage drive dubbed Time Capsule.
Shares of Apple slipped, losing $9.74, or 5.5 percent, to close Tuesday at $169.04. They fell another 3.6 percent, to $163.01, in after-hours trading.
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
The Battle of Online Rentals
Side-by-side Comparison of BlockBuster Online™ DVD Rentals, NetFlix.com, and Intelliflix
BlockBuster Online
- Keep the DVDs as long as you want No Late Fees
- Over 80,000 titles
- Most members receive DVDs in one business day
- Exchange in-store for instant access to movies
- Delivered to your Mailbox
- Free Shipping & Postage
- No Return Dates
- Cancel Anytime
- Now Accepts PayPal for Online Subscription
$$ Cost $$:
BLOCKBUSTER TOTAL ACCESS PREMIUM:
$34.99 / mo. + tax: 3 DVDs at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through mail Unlimited in-store movie exchanges.
$29.99 / mo. + tax: 2 DVDs at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through mail Unlimited in-store movie exchanges.
$21.99 / mo. + tax: 1 DVD at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through mail Unlimited in-store movie exchanges.
BLOCKBUSTER TOTAL ACCESS:
$19.99 / mo. + tax: 3 DVDs at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through the mail 5 free in-store exchanges per calendar month*
$16.99 / mo. + tax: 2 DVDs at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through the mail 3 free in-store exchanges per calendar month*
$11.99 / mo. + tax: 1 DVD at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through the mail 2 free in-store exchanges per calendar month*
$9.99 / mo. + tax: 1 DVD at-a-time 2 DVDs per month 2 free in-store exchanges per calendar month*
BLOCKBUSTER BY MAIL:
$15.99 / mo. + tax: 3 DVDs at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through the mail $1.99 in-store movie exchanges
$13.99 / mo. + tax: 2 DVDs at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through the mail $1.99 in-store movie exchanges
$8.99 / mo. + tax: 1 DVD at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through the mail $1.99 in-store movie exchanges
$3.99 / mo. + tax: 1 DVD at-a-time 2 DVDs per month $1.99 in-store movie exchanges
BlockBuster Online
- Keep the DVDs as long as you want No Late Fees
- Over 80,000 titles
- Most members receive DVDs in one business day
- Exchange in-store for instant access to movies
- Delivered to your Mailbox
- Free Shipping & Postage
- No Return Dates
- Cancel Anytime
- Now Accepts PayPal for Online Subscription
$$ Cost $$:
BLOCKBUSTER TOTAL ACCESS PREMIUM:
$34.99 / mo. + tax: 3 DVDs at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through mail Unlimited in-store movie exchanges.
$29.99 / mo. + tax: 2 DVDs at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through mail Unlimited in-store movie exchanges.
$21.99 / mo. + tax: 1 DVD at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through mail Unlimited in-store movie exchanges.
BLOCKBUSTER TOTAL ACCESS:
$19.99 / mo. + tax: 3 DVDs at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through the mail 5 free in-store exchanges per calendar month*
$16.99 / mo. + tax: 2 DVDs at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through the mail 3 free in-store exchanges per calendar month*
$11.99 / mo. + tax: 1 DVD at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through the mail 2 free in-store exchanges per calendar month*
$9.99 / mo. + tax: 1 DVD at-a-time 2 DVDs per month 2 free in-store exchanges per calendar month*
BLOCKBUSTER BY MAIL:
$15.99 / mo. + tax: 3 DVDs at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through the mail $1.99 in-store movie exchanges
$13.99 / mo. + tax: 2 DVDs at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through the mail $1.99 in-store movie exchanges
$8.99 / mo. + tax: 1 DVD at-a-time Unlimited DVDs through the mail $1.99 in-store movie exchanges
$3.99 / mo. + tax: 1 DVD at-a-time 2 DVDs per month $1.99 in-store movie exchanges
Sign-up for a free trial here:
NetFlix
- Delivered to your Mailbox - Free Shipping & Postage - No Return Dates
- Watch classics to new releases to TV series
$$ Cost $$
$23.99 - 4 DVDs at-a-time no monthly limit + Unlimited hours instantly on your PC
$16.99 - 3 DVDs at-a-time no monthly limit + Unlimited hours instantly on your PC
$13.99 - 2 DVDs at-a-time no monthly limit + Unlimited hours instantly on your PC
$ 8.99 - 1 DVD at-a-time no monthly limit + Unlimited hours instantly on your PC
$ 4.99 - 1 DVD at-a-time limited to 2 per month + 2 hours instantly on your PC
IntelliFlix
- Keep the DVDs as long as you want No Late Fees
- Over 60,000 Movies
- Large selection of DVD and Adult Titles
- Unlimited DVD Rentals - Delivered to your Mailbox - Free Shipping & Postage
$$ Cost $$
MOVIE PLANS
$3.96 - $4.96 per rental: 1 DVD at-a-time “Pay Per Rental (individual DVD rentals)” Up to 4 DVDs out at one time
$19.95 per month: 3 DVDs at-a-time Unlimited Monthly Rentals
$3.99 per mo.avg. / $47.88 Total Price: 1 DVD at-a-time 2 DVDs per month
$9.98 per mo. avg. / $119.70 Total Price: 3 DVDs at-a-time Unlimited Monthly Rentals
Movies + Mature Plans
$3.96 - $4.96 per rental: $3.96 - $4.96 per rental “Pay Per Rental (individual DVD rentals)” Up to 4 DVDs out at one time
$27.95 per month: 3 DVDs at-a-time Unlimited Monthly Rentals
$5.99 per mo.avg. / $71.88 Total Price: 1 DVD at-a-time 2 DVDs per month
$13.98 per mo. avg. / $167.70 Total Price: 3 DVDs at-a-time Unlimited Monthly Rentals
Verdict:
If you there’s a Blockbuster Store near your place of course the easiest choice is BlockBuster Online you can rent online and you can exchange them in-store. Netflix is good but they don’t have stores like Blockbuster Online, this is one of Blockbuster’s edge over Netflix. However, both Blockbuster and Netflix are family oriented so they don’t have mature collections. If you’re looking for mature movies Intelliflix has the best collections.
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